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Asian Fury: A tale of Race, Rock, and Air Guitar. Sydney Hutchinson

Por: Hutchinson, SydneyTipo de material: ArtículoArtículoIdioma: Inglés Series Ethnomusicology. Journal of the Society for Ethnomusicology ; no. 3Detalles de publicación: Illinois-XXU : University of Illinois Press, 2016Descripción: páginas 411-433: ilustraciones en blanco y negroTema(s): GENEROS MUSICALES | MUSICA POPULAR | ETNOMUSICOLOGIA En: Sociey for Ethnomusicology Ethnomusicology. Journal of the Society for EthnomusicologyResumen: Attending to race has become essential in ethnomusicology at least since publication of Music and the Racial Imagination (2000). And what sort of musical performance could be more imaginary than air guitar? Compet- itive air guitarists realized long before scholars that their art form provided an ideal means by which to contest the overwhelming whiteness of rock and electric guitar, sometimes extending their critique to include gender as well. Asian and Asian American competitors in particular used their one-minute stage performances to comment ironically on the emasculation of Asian males and the infantilization of Asian females through the construct of "Asian fury." Based on field research in Germany, Finland, and the United States since 2009, this article argues that air guitar performance has helped certain audiences to reimagine the linkages between race and rock.Existencias: 1
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Publicaciones Periodicas Extranjeras Publicaciones Periodicas Extranjeras Museo Nacional de Etnografía y Folklore
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Revistas E/ ETHNOM/ vol.60(3)/ 2016 no.3 1 Disponible HEMREV029271

Attending to race has become essential in ethnomusicology at least since publication of Music and the Racial Imagination (2000). And what sort of musical performance could be more imaginary than air guitar? Compet- itive air guitarists realized long before scholars that their art form provided an ideal means by which to contest the overwhelming whiteness of rock and electric guitar, sometimes extending their critique to include gender as well. Asian and Asian American competitors in particular used their one-minute stage performances to comment ironically on the emasculation of Asian males and the infantilization of Asian females through the construct of "Asian fury." Based on field research in Germany, Finland, and the United States since 2009, this article argues that air guitar performance has helped certain audiences to reimagine the linkages between race and rock.

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